Today, we’re talking about how to do the muffin method: what it is, the steps, examples, and more. There’s even a video for you to watch to learn the steps in the muffin mixing method.
Settle in, friends, because I’m not only going to teach you how to make muffins (and quick breads and pancakes) but also help you understand why we make them using this method. Let’s go!
You can find all my mixing method posts in one place. And don’t miss all my muffin and quick bread recipes. Thanks for stopping by!
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The Muffin Method Mixing Method
Here’s another one of those basic mixing methods that can really mess us up. Sure, the muffin method sounds like a day at the beach:
- Dry in one bowl.
- Wet in another.
- Wet in dry.
- Stir, stir, stir.
- Bake.
But like with many things that seem easy and straightforward, there are ways you can trip up.
And I don’t want that to happen to you.
What Is the Difference Between a Muffin and a Cupcake?
The main differences are that muffins:
- use liquid rather than solid fat (oil or melted butter)
- less fat than cupcakes
- less sugar than cupcakes
- can have lots of mix-ins
- are not necessarily frosted
If you try to use The Creaming Method (which is how most American-style cakes and cupcakes are made) to make a muffin recipe–to be clear, a muffin recipe written as a muffin, with relatively little fat and low-sugar, etc–you won’t be able to build up a viable batter because there is too little sugar and fat to cream together to have it hold onto the eggs and dry ingredients without breaking.
So muffin recipes that are written to be made using the creaming method will generally have more fat and sugar in them than traditional muffins.
This makes them cupcakes and not muffins. If you’re going to make a muffin, just make a muffin.
Don’t get me wrong. I enjoy a good cupcake, but when I want a muffin, I want that tender, almost fall-apart consistency, and I want it lean enough (low enough in fat) that I can slather it with butter and jam without feeling too guilty.
For example, these chocolate cherry buttermilk muffins. A great example of the power of the Muffin Method!
So, let’s forget the creaming method for muffins and focus on making lean, tender muffins the “right” way!
What Else Can I Use The Muffin Method For?
This is the right mixing method to use if:
- The fat content is relatively low and is in liquid form (oil or melted butter)
- The sugar content is relatively low
- The amount of liquid is relatively high
Recipes that check those boxes are generally quick bread coffee cakes like this brown butter blueberry buckle, pancakes, banana bread, and other classic quick breads like cornbread.
How to Do the Muffin Method

Here are the steps for performing the muffin mixing method. This is a method you do not want to use the mixer for.
Trust me, as much as you love your
[bctt tweet=”As much as you love your stand mixer, your muffins will be better if you mix them gently by hand.”]
The before step: If you’re using mix-ins, toast any nuts, measure everything out, chop any mix-ins that seem too big, and have them ready to go.
1. Whisk the dry ingredients–low-protein flour (White Lily is a nice one if you’re in the southern US, or use cake flour) together with salt, sugar, leavenings and any spices–together in a large bowl.
Whisk your dry ingredients together very well. You are looking for even dispersal of the salt and leaveners. Sifting doesn’t necessarily do a great job of this, so whisk all the dry together thoroughly, for at least 20 seconds. More would be good.
To be extra sure, sift and then whisk.
2. In another bowl or a large liquid measure, combine all the wet ingredients–dairy (milk, cream, 1/2 and 1/2, sour cream, creme fraiche), eggs, liquid fat, liquid flavorings.

Notice I said “liquid fat.” This is one of the points where the muffin method differs from the creaming method which relies on creaming solid fat and butter together to help with leavening.
When you add the fat to the liquid, you want to make sure that all of the liquid ingredients are at room temperature.
You want the fat to be evenly dispersed throughout the batter. For this to happen, you’re going to have to have the rest of the wet ingredients warm enough that the butter won’t turn hard on you the moment you pour it in the measuring cup.
3. Pour the wet on top of the dry and fold them gently together.
Let’s take a moment to really look at what’s going on here.
You’re trying to mix a lot of water-type ingredients together with flour that hasn’t been coated with fat. Remember, in the two-stage mixing method, we coated our flour with a good amount of fat to inhibit gluten formation. Here, we don’t have that luxury.
In the muffin method, we are pouring a ton of wet ingredients on poor, defenseless flour. How do we keep from having dense, chewy muffins, then?
- we’re using a low protein flour, so that’s a good thing–low protein equals less gluten formation.
- When mixing wet into naked flour with the intention of producing a tender muffin, easy does it. You really just want to fold the ingredients together, making sure that you limit agitation as much as possible.
Alton Brown says to stir for a count of ten, but your ten and my ten might be different. I say:
Fold the ingredients together until all the flour is off the bottom of the bowl and you don’t have any big pockets of flour floating around in your batter.
NOTE: Stir in your mix-ins before you get your batter completely mixed. This will help make sure you don’t overmix.
The batter will be somewhat lumpy, and it will be much thinner than a batter made with the creaming method, but you’ll just have to trust that it’ll be okay.
At this point, if you are leavening with baking powder, you can let the batter sit for 15-20 minutes. This gives the flour time to properly hydrate.
It will sort of magically finish mixing itself. Double-acting baking powder gives some rise when it gets wet and then some more when it gets hot, so your muffins will still rise in the oven, even after sitting out for a bit.
If the recipe only calls for baking soda, skip the resting step, as the bubbles are all given up when the soda gets wet.
With recipes that only call for baking soda, you want to get those little guys in the oven as quickly as possible before the chemical reaction stops.
4. Scoop your batter into well-greased (or paper-lined) muffin tins. Fill the cavities about 80% full.

5. Bake at a relatively high temperature–425F is a good place to start.
So, why this high temperature?
To me, and to lots of folks, muffins are defined by their crowns–their majestic peaks.
In order to get this to happen, you have to bake at a high enough temperature that the edges of the muffin set pretty quickly.
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Picture it as the batter setting in concentric circles, from the outside, in, and as each “band” of batter sets up, the remaining batter will continue to rise.
The last to set is the very peak. If you bake at a lower temperature, you will end up with something that looks more like a cupcake rather than a peaked muffin.
If you like them that way, go for it, and bake at a lower temperature. Just wanted you to know the “why” behind the peak.
6. Remove from oven. Cool in pans for about ten minutes, and then turn out to cool completely–or not. You could just go ahead and eat one.
What About Mix-Ins?
One of the joys of a great muffin is the mix-in possibilities. They are pretty limitless, whether you want to add just one mix-in or a mixture of harmonious flavors and/or contrasting textures.
Here are some ideas for stand alone additions as well as likely combinations of flavors.
Single Mix-Ins
- Nuts (peanuts, pecans, walnuts, cashews, etc)
- Dried fruits (raisins, apricots, apple, dates, figs, etc)
- Small whole fruits (blueberries, raspberries, currants, etc)
- Diced fresh fruit (strawberries, large blackberries, apple, mango, pineapple, peach, etc)
- Chocolate chips (dark, milk, white, or chopped chocolate bar of any type)
- Other Chips (toffee, peanut butter, etc)
- Miscellaneous (cocoa nibs, shredded coconut, etc)
Combination Flavors
Broadly, this can mean:
- Nuts and chocolate (dealer’s choice!)
- fruit and nuts
- fruit and chocolate
- fruit, chocolate, and nuts
More specifically (and these are just off the top of my head):
- chopped mandarin orange, chopped pineapple, and coconut
- chocolate chips and peanut butter chips
- chocolate chips and hazelnuts
- chopped fresh peaches and pecans
- apple (and/or pear) and walnuts
- chocolate and cherry
- a mixture of stone fruits (cherry, apricot, peach) and almonds
- and pretty much the sky is the limit
Three Rules for Muffins Mix-Ins
- The maximum amount of mix-ins per 12 standard sized muffins is about 2 cups. Any more than that, and your muffins may not hold together very well.
- If you’re going to use nuts, please toast them first. They’ll have more flavor and a crunchier texture. I toast mine in the toaster oven for about 4 minutes, but watch them carefully so they don’t burn.
NOTE: You have more leeway if you toast the nuts whole before chopping them rather than trying to toast them once they’re chopped. More surface area means they will burn more easily. - As much as possible, have all your mix-ins the same size. You don’t necessarily want to bite into a whole Brazil nut or a big old fig. If you are using mix-ins of different sizes, chop the larger mix-ins to roughly match the size of the smaller ones.
For example, in my chocolate chip, cherry, and pecan buttermilk muffins, the pecans are larger than the cherry pieces and chocolate chips, so I chopped the pecans so they were all of similar size.

What To Look for In a Great Muffin
After you’ve baked your muffins, you can test yourself to see if you’ve done an Excellent Job with this mixing method.
- Cut or break a muffin in half, right down the middle, from peak to bottom.
- Look at the crumb. It should be fairly coarse but moist.
- It should also be very uniform. If you have little tunnels running up through the muffins, you know that you were a little too exuberant in your mixing.
- The tunnels show the path of air bubbles as they passed through the batter and were caught by sheets of gluten. The gluten then sets in that bubble-path shape, a silent reminder of your enthusiastic mixing.
- Tunnels are a sure sign of over-mixing your muffin batter.

[bctt tweet=”The tunnels show the path of air bubbles as they passed through the batter…”]
Aside from the crumb, pay attention to the shape of your muffins. They should rise high and be domed on top, like non-craggy mountain peaks.
If your muffins are flatter on top, most likely either:
- your leavening was out of date or
- your didn’t bake in a hot enough oven.
You’ll also want to check that your mix-ins are evenly distributed throughout your batter.
Pro-Tip
If you are concerned that your mix-ins might all fall to the bottom, only mix them into about 2/3 of the batter.
Then fill the muffin cups about 1/4 of the way with plain batter and top them all off with the batter containing the mix-ins.
That will give you a bit of a buffer to help ensure that your mixins stay suspended. I learned that trick from Stella Parks over at Serious Eats.
The Muffin Method Recap
- Whisk dry ingredients together thoroughly.
- Have all wet ingredients at room temp. Not the creaming method’s magical “cool room temperature,” because you’re not worried about the butter remaining plastic–it’s already melted. By room temperature, I’m talking around 75F.
- Fold gently. Stop before you think you’re finished.
- If you’re adding mix-ins, be sure to add them while there is plenty of loose flour in the batter so you are extra sure not to over-mix.
- Let the batter sit (baking powder only).
- Bake at a relatively high temperature.
I baked a batch of blueberry muffins using ‘The muffin method’ and they were quite simply the most delicious muffins I have ever tasted! I gave some to a friend and she said the same.
Muffin Maker Jane
What Size Should I Make My Muffins?
The keen thing about making muffins is that you can make them in all sorts of sizes–mini muffins, regular muffins or jumbo muffins. Pans are readily available, too, which makes it easy to get started.
Jumbo muffin tins hold anywhere between 2 and 3 times the amount of batter as regular muffin tins. My recipe for 6 jumbo blackberry muffins will fill between 12 and 18 regular muffin tin cavities.
I don’t recommend baking muffins in silicone muffin tins.
While they won’t stick, which is great, they also don’t brown since silicone is such a good insulator.
Muffin Method Q & A
The main challenge of the muffin method is mixing the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients without activating too much gluten. This is especially challenging with traditional muffins which contain relatively little sugar and fat that would help tenderize gluten.
The main leavener in muffins is carbon dioxide bubbles which are produced by chemical leaveners: either baking powder and/or baking soda. Baking powder reacts with liquid and heat to create bubbles. Baking soda reacts with acids to create bubbles.
Making a well in the dry ingredients just means using a spoon or whisk to make sure that your dry ingredients are higher on the sides of your bowl and have a depression in the center. This depression leaves a place for you to pour your wet ingredients. Then when you start folding the two together, the flour around the edges will naturally fall into the center and on top of the wet ingredients. This helps you mix more quickly while still being gentle to inhibit gluten formation.
Muffin batter is generally fairly thick and can be somewhat lumpy. Not just from the mix-ins, but also from little pockets of flour. If your muffin batter is too smooth, it probably means you have overmixed it.
Overmixed muffins will bake up dense and chewy. They may also have lots of little u0022tunnelsu0022 in them. The tunnels form as the bubbles in the batter work their way up and out of the batter during baking. The gluten ends up getting u0022pushed asideu0022 and then holds the shape of the bubbles as they pass.
If you are leavening your muffins with baking powder or a mixture of baking powder and baking soda, you can let the batter sit out for about 20 minutes. This will help make sure your flour is nice and hydrated before baking. If, however, the only leavener is baking soda, you need to get them in the oven as soon after mixing as possible so you don’t lose all the bubbles.
To fill muffin cups without making a mess, either mix the batter in a batter bowl with a spout or scrape your batter into a pitcher. Alternatively, you may fill your muffin cups with a portion scoop or an ice cream scoop.
You’ll know your muffins are done when they are firm and dry on top and have nice rounded peaks. They should be a lovely golden brown. If you take the internal temperature, you’re looking for about 195F.
Allow muffins to sit about 5-10 minutes before removing from the pan to cool completely on cooling racks.
After allowing your muffins to cool for 5-10 minutes in the pan, I like to use a small, tapered spatula or even just a butter knife to lift up one side of the muffins so I can then grab them and remove them to a cooling rack.
No. All the bubbles from the leavener will have long since dissipated, so if you have a doughy center, you’ll just end up with a dense, baked center. To make sure your muffins are baked through, take the internal temperature. If they are browning too much before they’re done in the center, loosely tent the muffins with aluminum foil during the last few minutes of baking.
Questions?
If you have any questions about this post or recipe, I am happy to help.
Simply leave a comment here and I will get back to you soon. I also invite you to ask question in my Facebook group, Fearless Kitchen Fun.
If your question is more pressing, please feel free to email me. I should be back in touch ASAP, as long as I’m not asleep.
A Note About Measurements
My recipes are almost all written by weight, including liquids, unless otherwise specified.
For accuracy and consistency of results, I encourage you to buy–and use–a kitchen scale.
I promise that baking and cleanup will be so much quicker and easier.
This is the scale that I recommend for home use. I have owned and used one for years.
Don't let its small price and small size fool you. The Escali Primo is an accurate and easy-to-use food scale that I have used for years. It's easy to store, easy to use, has a tare function, and easily switches between grams and ounces/pounds for accurate measurements.
It will help me and other readers so much if you take a moment to rate and leave a review for this recipe.
You can use the stars to rate 1-5 (5 is best), and leave a review in the comments. It helps me make adjustments if any are needed, and comments help others decide whether the recipe is worth making.
Other ways to share include pinning, and/or sharing on your favorite social media platform.
Thank you so much for taking the time!


Basic Muffin Recipe
Video
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Equipment
Ingredients
- 8 oz low protein flour ( 2 scant cups) such as cake flour, pastry flour or White Lily flour
- 3.5 oz 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 2 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1 large egg at room temperature
- 6 oz 3/4 cup whole milk at room temperature
- 2 ½ oz 5 Tablespoons or a little over 1/2 stick butter, melted and cooled to barely warm
Instructions
- Position a rack in the center of the oven. Preheat oven to 425F.
- Line a 12-cavity muffin tin with paper liners or spray lightly with pan spray. Set aside.
- Whisk together the dry ingredients in a large bowl–flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
- Whisk together the wet ingredients in a small bowl–egg, milk, and melted butter.
- Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients. Pour in the wet, and stir/fold until mixed but still a little lumpy.
- Allow the batter to sit for about 10 minutes, then portion out using a disher (ice cream scoop).
- Bake until well risen, nicely peaked, and deep golden brown on top, 15-20 minutes.
Did You Make Any Changes?
Notes
- Flavor the batter with citrus zest, spices, extracts, and/or herbs.
- Mix in up to 2 cups of inclusions: fresh or frozen fruit (don’t thaw frozen fruit), nuts, raisins, chocolate chips, etc. Toss together with the dry ingredients right before adding the wet ingredients. Use a mixture of inclusions to equal 2 cups. For example, 1 cup fresh or frozen cranberries, 1/2 cup chopped oranges, well drained, and 1/2 cup toasted pecans
- Top muffins with sparkling sugar or a simple streusel.
Nutrition

Hi, y’all! I hope you’ve enjoyed this post and hopefully also learned a thing or two.
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Now, go make some tender muffins using the muffin method. No tunnels.
Thank you for spending some time with me today.
Take care, y’all.



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Thanks for this great muffin tutorial! I love understanding how and why the science works.
Hi, Kate! You are very welcome–I love this kind of information, too, and I am happy to share it!
The last two muffin recipes I used called for sour cream and only baking powder as the leavener. While the flavor was great and they were very moist (berry muffins), the texture was more like very moist banana bread. I thought I was being very cautious about overmixing. I’ll have to check the ratio of flour (used AP flour) to baking powder but any other ideas of what may cause this? I baked the first batter soon after mixing. Read about refrigerating batter but didn’t have the patience to keep in the fridge overnight; refrigerated about 45 minutes but still the same result. I will be trying your recipe tonight just as written but am curious to find out what may have created the issues with my other two attempts.
Hey, Deb. I’d have to see your complete recipe to form any opinions on why your muffins had a different texture than what you were expecting. Off the top of my head, it sounds like it was a higher-suger recipe. Since sugar is hygroscopic, the more sugar, the moister the result. For me, a “true muffin” is relatively lean and is relatively low sugar and bake up with a drier and loose crumb, perfect for slathering with butter and jam. Let me know how this recipe does for you and check your amounts of sugar and fat against my basic recipe and see how the two stack up.
Thank you for all those tips and explanation. Wow! I learned soo much. Made banana muffins and they domed beautifully! Wow! I had a recipe very similar to yours but they indicated 350F. I put it at 425F as you indicated and that was it! Shared your recipe with my family in France with your tips. I am going to look at other recipes on your site. Can’t wait. Thank you, thank you thank you.
Hi, Nathalie! I’m so pleased my muffin tips helped you and that your banana muffins rose to great heights! I’m glad you found my site. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you have any questions!
this is truly useful…Thanks a lot for sharing !!!!!!
You’re more than welcome. Understanding how and why to use each mixing method is fundamental! So glad you found this helpful!
This was a very informative and comprehensive explanation on the muffin method, I learned a lot. I mostly make whole grain(whole wheat flour) muffins because that’s better for my Crohn’s. How much more liquid should I add to the batter to make sure the muffins are moist? Should it be in the form of more oil? Or some Greek yogurt or milk? For example, how would you change your basic muffin recipe using whole wheat flour? Thanks!
Hey, Becky! Glad you found the post helpful! Whole wheat flour is a bit “thirstier” than refined flour for sure. I’d add an additional 2 teaspoons to 1 tablespoon liquid per cup of flour. In the base recipe in the post, for 8 oz whole wheat flour, I’d increase the milk by 2 Tablespoons. You could also use a bit less of the whole wheat flour and leave the liquid measurement the same. I haven’t done the conversion on that, so I don’t really know how much less you would have to use, but it is definitely worth experimenting with. I hope that helps at least some. 🙂
muffins are so good I love them I wish they had timtam and minteslice and Maltese muffins 😀
Once you know how to make muffins, you can put anything you want in them! =)
Hi there , I find very good article , but I have a guestion , when we bake the muffing at 400 f , how long should we bake ?? 10-15 min ??
Thank you
It depends on a lot of factors: how dense your batter is, how accurate your oven is, what size muffins, etc. That’s why I often hesitate to give a solid answer. The glib answer is “until they’re done,” but it’s also true. I would give them a good 10-12 min and then check them and go from there. They could take as long as 20-ish minutes. I wish I could be more specific, but there are just too many variables. The good news is that once you figure out how long it takes in your oven, that can be your new target time.
I made 2 dozen Blueberry Banana Oat muffins this morning…tasty, but pretty darn flat. I found this post and decided to try your recipe right away. This time I made Chocolate chip muffins, what a difference! I doubled your recipe but only had about four oz of milk..made up the difference with 6 oz of greek yogurt and a little water. They turned out beautiful! Can’t wait to fiddle with it some more! Thank you!
I’m so glad it worked out for you, Suzanne! Enjoy your experimentation and your lovely peaked muffins!
Woops I left a a defunct email address in the previous post. Please use this one instead.
I’m interested in the difference between using baking soda or baking powder. Why would a recipe call for one over the other in muffin recipes ….the effects etc.
If you look at my post on leaveners, that will give you the basics: http://www.squidoo.com/bakingandpastry#module12253950 Baking soda is the actual leavener in both soda and powder. The powder is soda plus an acidic ingredient to balance the pH of the batter. Basic rule of thumb is to use baking powder as the neutral leavener and also baking soda to balance any acidic ingredients, at the rate of about 1/4 teaspoon per cup. Acidic ingredients that would need soda to balance them out include coffee, buttermilk, yogurt, sour cream, molasses/brown sugar (if enough if used), etc.
Thank you so much for your well written information. Very helpful!
I am iinterested in making whole grain muffins with whole spelt and whole wheat flour.
Can I still expect to get a crusted top with these? Have you any tips or guidelines for baking muffins with whole grains?
Also if I simply replace milk with soy, rice, or almond milk to make it non dairy would that work?
Thanks
Chaya
Hi, Chaya! Glad you found the post helpful!
I don’t do much baking with whole grain/whole wheat, so I don’t really know how to advise you there. I think that to get the nicest texture/peak, you may have to only sub about 30% of your total flour for whole grains.
As to the milk, generally speaking, you should be fine to sub in coconut milk, soy milk, etc for the dairy. There may be a bit of a difference in texture, but it should be minimal.
Hi, I recently made pumpkin pie and had about 2.5 cups of leftover mix. The site suggested making pumpkin bread or muffins with the remaining mix but didn’t give instructions so I followed a suggestion in the comments and mixed together baking powder and flour. Then I added some oil to the liquid mix and mixed the dry in with the wet. The batter seemed a decent consistency but the muffins turned out very dense and undercooked even though I cooked th over 25 minutes. I did bake them at 325 because my pie was still cooking. Emma’s the oven way too low? Was there another issue? I’d appreciate any insights you might have!
*was my oven
First of all, yay for you for just going for it! When I want to try something new (to me, anyway), I do some research and find some recipes that are similar to what I’m going for to look at proportions of ingredients. Off the top of my head, it sounds like you needed more leavening and a higher temp. Muffins generally bake in a hot oven–maybe 425F or so, so the slower rise probably made for a denser muffin. How was the flavor, otherwise? For me, the flavor is the thing, so if that part is good, you’re more than halfway there!
Hi Jennifer,
Thank you for taking the time to respond to my question. The muffins were pretty bland. I’m going to do some research as you suggested because the pie came out so well I’ll make the recipe again, which means another try at the muffins!
Hopefully it’ll go better this time. Do make sure you’re using a reasonable amount of salt in them. All desserts need it, but pumpkin *really* needs it to perk up the flavor. =)
Thanks so much for a delicious and perfect muffin recipe! As an avowed health nut (who, unfortunately still has a sweet tooth and a desire for that irresistible crunch of muffin tops) I switched out the flower for King Arthurs White Whole Wheat flour (it’s the best WWW out there!) and put in a quarter cup of Extra Virgin Olive Oil as my fat, but it still was delicious!
Brilliant tips, beautiful explanations and delicious muffins!! (how much better can you get?)
Oh yay! I am so glad it worked out for you, and I’m really happy to know that my post was helpful to you. Thank you so much for stopping in and commenting, and enjoy the muffins! (and if you’re feeling very healthy, add some flaxmeal to some streusel topping)! =)
Hello,
The recipe below produces what seems to me to be cupcakes – not muffins. The look of the crumb looks like cake, I swear. The cakes turn out very good. Still, there is no creaming method involved. Would you say the method in this recipe is the “muffin method” anyway?
Thanks!!!
Chris
Vanilla Cupcakes:
1 1/4 cups cake flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
3/4 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1/2 cup oil (vegetable, canola or extra light olive oil)
1/2 cup buttermilk
Directions-
* Preheat oven to 350*F.
* In a medium bowl, add cake flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Stir together with whisk, and set aside.
* In the bowl of an electric mixer, add eggs and beat 10-20 seconds. Add sugar and continue to beat on medium speed about 30 seconds. Add vanilla and oil, beat.
* Reduce mixer speed to low and slowly add about half of the flour mixture. Add half of the milk, then the rest of the flour and the rest of the milk. Beat until just combined. Scrap down the side of the bowl.
* The batter will be thin. Pour batter into a muffin pan prepared with paper liners. Fill liners about 2/3 full.
* Bake cupcakes in pre-heated oven for 12-14 minutes.
Very helpful information. Thank you!
How do I change this recipe if I want to make chocolate muffin?
Well, this post is really more about the technique than the recipe. But, if you want to play around with turning this into a chocolate muffin while keeping the mixing method the same, you can start by subbing in cocoa powder for a portion of the flour (equal substitution, by weight). Maybe start with 1.5 oz of cocoa powder and 6.5 oz of flour to start with. You could also consider subbing part buttermilk, part coffee for the milk called for in the recipe. The buttermilk will play well with the cocoa and the coffee will reinforce the chocolate flavor.
If you do that, add in a teaspoon of baking soda along with the baking powder to balance the acidity in the coffee/buttermilk.
You can also stir in some chocolate chips as well.
Hope that is helpful.